Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
5 years ago
05.05.2020, 22:15 GMT-4
To clarify: by "rotating-wave electromagnetic," do you mean a circularly-polarized electromagnetic wave?
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Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
To clarify: by "rotating-wave electromagnetic," do you mean a circularly-polarized electromagnetic wave?
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Posted:
5 years ago
08.05.2020, 00:21 GMT-4
yes circularly-polarized electromagnetic wave as is show in the figure.
Could I simulate a cylindrical cavity in 3d with two ports at the bottom of the cavity with this type of wave (figure)?
Thanks for the help.
yes circularly-polarized electromagnetic wave as is show in the figure.
Could I simulate a cylindrical cavity in 3d with two ports at the bottom of the cavity with this type of wave (figure)?
Thanks for the help.
Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
5 years ago
08.05.2020, 14:38 GMT-4
I don't know if Comsol provides an example model. You could look though the RF-module library files. Regardless, you can launch user-defined waves via either ports with "user-defined" fields or with scattering BCs with user-defined fields. You'll have to enter the field expressions yourself. If you find it confusing, start with simpler expressions and watch how they behave in the model. Make sure you can launch plane waves, for example. (And bear in mind that a circularly polarized wave can be written as a superposition of two linearly polarized waves with the same k-vector, but with orthogonal E vectors, and where one of them lags the other by 90 deg in phase.
-------------------
Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
I don't know if Comsol provides an example model. You could look though the RF-module library files. Regardless, you can launch user-defined waves via either ports with "user-defined" fields or with scattering BCs with user-defined fields. You'll have to enter the field expressions yourself. If you find it confusing, start with simpler expressions and watch how they behave in the model. Make sure you can launch plane waves, for example. (And bear in mind that a circularly polarized wave can be written as a superposition of two linearly polarized waves with the same k-vector, but with orthogonal E vectors, and where one of them lags the other by 90 deg in phase.
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Posted:
5 years ago
12.05.2020, 23:57 GMT-4
Thanks